91 So. 418 | Miss. | 1922
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant, John Hardaway, was convicted of murder and sentenced to the penitentiary for life at the September, 1921, term of the circuit court of Lowndes county, and from this judgment and sentence he prosecutes this appeal.
As eyewitnesses to the tragedy, the state introduced two little girls about eight years of age, daughters of the appellant and the deceased. These witnesses were first qualified as competent witnesses by preliminary examination, and they testified that, accompanied by their mother, they had started to the house of a neighbor, where their mother intended to do some sewing; that after they had proceeded a short distance along a path through the woods, they were overtaken by their father, the appellant, who was armed with a shotgun; that appellant said to his wife that he had been intending to kill her for some time; that he then struck her on the head with the barrel of the gun; that their mother screamed and retreated from him, begging him not to shoot her; that he then raised the gun and shot her in the stomach at close range, from which wound she died shortly afterwards. According to the testimony of these state witnesses the killing was a cold, unprovoked, and deliberate murder.
The defendant testified that the shooting was accidental; that he did not intend to kill his wife; that he had suspected his wife of infidelity for some time, and that as she was proceeding along the path through the woods he saw a man approaching her, whom he suspected she intended to meet; that he got his gun and went to talk to this man;
Appellant complains of the modification of various instructions, without pointing out wherein any instruction was modified, and the record fails to disclose that any instruction was modified by the court. Appellant also complains of the refusal of the court to grant his instructions on manslaughter.
We find in the record two instructions correctly announcing the law of manslaughter, which are marked “Given,” and to which the trial judge appended a note that they were not read to the jury because of modification as indicated. The criticism directed at these two instructions cannot prevail, for the reason that the record fails to show what, if any, modification therein was made bv the court, and for the additional reason that the instructions as they appear in the record correctly announce the law of manslaughter, and since the court granted two instructions correctly announcing the law of manslaughter, which the appellant refused to read to the jury, he cannot now complain that the jury was not instructed upon this question.
Instructions numbered 4, 7, and 18, which were refused by the court, sought to submit to the jury the theory that a husband, who instantly kills his wife, or her paramour, on discovering them in the act of adultery, is guilty only of manslaughter. There was no evidence whatever to support these instructions, and they were properly refused.
We do not think there is any merit in any of the other assignments of error. The law applicable to the theory of the defense was fully and accurately given to the jury in the twenty-four instructions granted the defendant. We find no reversible error in the admission or exclusion of evidence, or in the granting or refusal of instructions, and therefore the judgment of the court below will be affirmed.
Affirmed.